London stars missing in action

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With Rafael Nadal, Chris Bosh and Carolina Kluft injured and David Beckham and Ian Thorpe past their best, the have been hit by a raft of pull-outs. “It is one of the saddest days of my career,” said Nadal, who was the gold medallist in tennis singles at Beijing, after announcing his withdrawal from the Games. The Spanish world number three, the winner of 50 career titles, including 11 Grand Slam titles, needs to rest his chronically suspect knees ahead of the US Open in New York next month.
His decision meant that he also had to surrender the honour of carrying the Spanish flag at Friday’s opening ceremony, a duty now to be assumed by basketball star Pau Gasol.
The United States basketball team will remain heavy favourites for gold despite losing Derrick Rose, Dwayne Wade, Chris Bosh, Dwight Howard, LaMarcus Aldridge and Chauncey Billups. Track and field has also lost Croatia’s double world high jump champion Blanka Vlasic who underwent an Achilles tendon operation in January.
Defending triple jump champion Nelson Evora of Portugal is also absent as is great French hope Teddy Thamgho, the world indoor champion in the discipline.
Sweden’s three-time world heptathlon champion Carolina Kluft pulled out of the Olympics on Sunday after suffering a thigh injury.
Kluft, 29, had been hoping to take part in the long jump but having picked up the injury at a small regional meeting in Kuortane, Finland, she made her decision to skip the Games.
“I don’t want to go to London with this kind of preparations,” she said. Kluft was Olympic heptathlon champion at the 2004 Athens Games and took the world title in 2003, 2005 and 2007.

2020 Games trio look to make impression in London

The London Olympics have not yet started but the three candidates still in the race to host the 2020 Summer Games are gearing up to make an impression in the British capital.
Tokyo, the only one of the three to have previously hosted the Games back in 1964, Istanbul and Madrid will learn their fate in Buenos Aires on September 13 next year when International Olympic Committee members vote.
The trio survived the initial cut when the short-list was voted on by the IOC Executive Board in Quebec City in May — Doha and Baku having been voted off — and Tokyo remain the frontrunners.
There are no doubts about their ability to host the showpiece, both in financial and infrastructure terms.
But perhaps another more powerful argument in their favour is that IOC members may be swayed into voting for the Japanese bid after the quake-tsunami disaster which left about 19,000 people dead or missing last year.
“It is a powerful argument, IOC members like a story and also are especially keen on the legacy message,” a source close to the IOC told AFP.
“What better legacy than to give them the Games for 2020 which will have a knock on effect in their eyes in terms of restoring morale to the Japanese people.